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Michigan Couple Sets Precedent
with Adoption of Karen RefugeesContact: Craig
McDonald,
Christian Freedom International, 906-253-2336
SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich., Dec. 9 /Christian
Newswire/ -- Jim and Karen Jacobson might describe themselves as
ordinary citizens, but the Michigan residents have done something so
extraordinary that they just may have set a new precedent in the U.S.
adoption arena. After nearly 18 months of wading through the murky waters of
bureaucratic red tape, they have become the legally adoptive parents of
eight refugee children, all of whom hail from Burma, one of the most
devastated and war-torn countries in the world.
The Jacobsons are hardly strangers to the plight of Burma's ethnic refugees,
who in recent years have finally been granted approval by the U.S. State
Department to seek asylum in the United States. Jim Jacobson's nonprofit
organization, Christian Freedom International (CFI), works extensively among
thousands of persecuted Karen and Karenni Christians in Burma and Thailand,
with Jacobson having personally made countless trips to the region
throughout the past decade to help build schools and medical clinics, and
deliver humanitarian aid and hope to a people who have been struggling in
the midst of a genocidal nightmare for decades.
Hundreds of Burma's refugees who relocate to the United States each year
have been orphaned by the violent war in their homeland. When the question
arose for Jacobson and his wife, Karen, about whether to adopt four refugee
siblings -- who had previously received care through CFI in Thailand before
arriving in the U.S. in the spring of 2008 -- the challenges stretched down
a seemingly endless road, one where no American had ever ventured before.
The lack of official birth records -- and no real way to determine a refugee
minor's true eligibility for adoption -- remains the primary obstacle in the
adoption of Karen and Karenni children directly from Burma's refugee camps,
and it was the initial hindrance to the Jacobsons' adoption once the
children were in the United States. "One of the things that makes it very
difficult to adopt refugee children is that there is no certificate of
foreign birth, they have no birth record at all," says Karen Jacobson. "The
only birth records they have are the ones that have been discovered or
researched by the UNHCR [United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees]. But
if they don't know it then they assign them a birth date, basically, because
no one knows the exact day." It was only when a Michigan judge finally
ruled, after six months of deliberations, that the children's green cards
and immigration paperwork could serve as 'Other Proof of Birth' that the
adoption process was allowed to move forward.
In the months that followed, the Jacobsons also applied to adopt four other
refugee children. "It was clear that all of the children wanted us to adopt
them," says Karen Jacobson. "The goal for them is to train and be educated
to someday go back and serve the Karen people.
"What we didn't know would happen is when those adoptions were finalized,
each of the children were issued a certificate of foreign birth, which is
critical to getting a passport or a work permit," says Karen. "That was a
detail that we knew had to be taken care of, but we didn't know the adoption
[process] would take care of it. That was a real miracle."
A birth certificate is also the key to applying for U.S. citizenship, which
the Jacobsons' adopted children will now be able to do instead of waiting
the required five-year period without one. As possibly the first American
family to adopt Karen children without foreign birth certificates, the
Jacobsons are determined to let other Americans who live in or near refugee
resettlement areas know that adoption can be an effective way of not only
providing a stable and loving home for Burma's refugee children, but to give
them easier, swifter access to educational opportunities and even American
citizenship.
Jim and Karen Jacobson now have 12 children and reside in Sault Ste. Marie,
Michigan.
With the help of dozens of volunteers, Christian Freedom International's
ministry continues to provide housing, employment opportunities,
transportation, and food and medical assistance for dozens of Karen refugees
who have relocated to the Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan area.
For more information about refugee resettlement or to learn more about the
Jacobsons' adoption, visit
www.christianfreedom.org or call 1-800-323-2273. |